JohnEGreen
Master
- Messages
- 14,001
- Location
- Nottinghamshire
- Type of diabetes
- Other
- Treatment type
- Diet only
- Dislikes
- Tripe and Onions
Interesting,
Twas the summer of 1976 when I was diagnosed.. Drought, sunburn. & I live in the south west?
One may have temparirily survived the cold? But how does one recover from a screwed up set of beta cells?
Even if there was an abundance of four legged critters to hit with a rock..
So we stayed warm & then died from DKA?
I just don't see any credibility in that article, for obvious reasons. Humans knew how to survive without developing an autoimmune condition that kills you. We are still doing it to this day.
yes but managed to breed before that the average life expectancy at that time being around 25 years.
It was the ice age huge numbers froze to death and did not survive those that survived either found some where warmer or adapted to the colder climate the author is postulating that one adaption was to have more glucose in your blood.
Enabling them to survive long enough to produce offspring
An interesting idea but not one I necessarily subscribe to.
Type 1 diabetes would have prevented many of our ancestors from freezing to death."
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